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Adaptive Optics First Light!
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December 2, 2000 |
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Images from
the ground are affected by atmospheric turbulence which
causes the light to be smeared out, even at an excellent
site such as the summit of Mauna Kea. The AO system has
a curvature sensor to monitor the atmospheric turbulence
and a bimorph deformable mirror to compensate for this turbulence,
resulting in much sharper images. |
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Wide Field Color Image with Suprime-Cam
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November 14, 2000 |
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Suprime-Cam
(Subaru Prime Focus Camera) is a wide field camera for visible
light, installed at the prime focus of Subaru Telescope.
It can currently produce a 24 x 24 arcminute square image
with each exposure, an area almost equal to the size of
the full moon (about 31 arcminutes in diameter, see supplement).
At present, Subaru is the only large telescope in the world
(primary mirror larger than 4 meters in diameter) that can
take such a large-scale image. |
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Observed Gamma-Ray Burst
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October 9, 2000 |
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The Subaru
Telescope with IRCS attached to the Cassegrain focus made
observations of the optical transient (OT) of Gamma-Ray
Burst GRB000926. This is the second time Subaru has been
used to observe a GRB OT. |
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Subaru Telescope Tracks Comet LINEAR
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July 24, 2000 |
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In general,
objects like stars and galaxies are so far away from us
that we can't detect a shift in their positions due to their
motion through space: they appear stationary with respect
to the other stars and galaxies. This is why the patterns
of stars ("constellations") described by our ancestors
hundreds or even thousands of years ago are recognizable
to us today. |
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Superb Observations with OHS (CISCO)
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July 6, 2000 |
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On May 24th
and 25th of this year, OHS (CISCO) at the Nasmyth focus
of Subaru Telescope observed the distant radio galaxy 4C+40.36
located about 10 billion light years from Earth. 4C+40.36
is a strong emitter of radio waves. It also produces strong
emission due to hydrogen, helium, oxygen and neon gases.
This galaxy is known to be very distant because the wavelengths
of its gaseous emission lines are greatly shifted towards
longer wavelengths. |
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0.3 Arcsec Resolution Imaging with Suprime-Cam
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June 22, 2000 |
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On June 3rd,
2000, Suprime-Cam obtained its best image to date, with
stars appearing a remarkable 0.3 arcsec in diameter (1/6000
the diameter of the full Moon) all across the half-degree
field-of-view. This is close to the theoretical maximum
sharpness that can be delivered by the camera (now mounted
at Subaru Telescope's prime focus) and indicates that the
repairs done a month ago to the detached fixed point were
done properly. |
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Subaru Catches a Burst from Space
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May 4, 2000 |
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The Subaru
Telescope with IRCS attached to the Cassegrain focus made
observations of the optical transient (OT) of Gamma-Ray
Burst GRB000301C. Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs for short) are
a phenomenon in which a huge amount of energy is released
as gamma ray (wavelength < 0.1 nanometer) in a matter
of seconds. GRBs were first discovered about 30 years ago
but their physical nature has not yet been determined. |
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Red Light flowing from Galaxy (M 82, NGC 3034)
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March 24, 2000 |
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M82 is the
82nd object in Charles Messier's 1784 catalogue of faint
nebulae. It is located approximately 12 million light-years
from the Earth and is classified as an irregular galaxy
because of its disordered shape. The bluish band seen running
from the upper-left to the lower-right of the image is due
to light from stars in the M82 galaxy. |
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